superchargers take power to make power as they are driven off the crank and they tend to be a little hard on the crank snout.
If the blower is undriven and producing minimal results the cost can't be justified.
If it's overdriven and making some serious boost that's a different story,
but you gotta have the motor built to handle the increased cylinder pressures.
forged or steel crank, good rods and forged or hypereutectic pistons to start with.
As a rule of thumb dynamic cylinder pressures are 10x the static pressures, so if the static cylinder pressure is 180 psi then the dynamic cylinder pressures can be as high as 1800 psi at TDC, when you add a blower, turbo or "nitrous" (do like i say, not like i do) the dynamic cylinder pressures can rise much higher.
blowers and turbos raise the static cylinder pressure by forcing more air into the chamber whereas nitrous only increases the dynamic cylinder pressure by allowing the engine to burn more fuel (that's why it's so neat)...you can have a somewhat normal sounding engine until you hit the button then all !@#$ breaks loose
if you have already done all the hop-up stuff like hedders and stuff then maybe think about bumping the compression, you could mill the heads and/or use thinner head gaskets or find a set of small chamber heads and bolt em up.